Lush Life: A Novel

Lush Life: A Novel
by Richard Price

Lush Life: A Novel
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Book Summary Information

Author: Richard Price
Edition: Hardcover
Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published)
Published: 2008-03-04
ISBN: 0374299250
Number of pages: 464
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Book Reviews of Lush Life: A Novel

Book Review: As good as you'd expect from Price
Summary: 4 Stars

Richard Price's writing career has established him as an author who can do it all, from novels to movies to TV, and after a few years of contributing his talents to the dearly departed TV classic The Wire he's returned to the printed word in a big way with Lush Life. Like a great deal of Price's work it has its overly slow spots, but Lush Life still marks a significant step up in quality from Price's last book, the merely good Samaritan, and comes pretty close to the level of the classic Clockers. It's both a heavily detailed crime procedural and a sweeping urban drama, with a wide-ranging scope that captures the aftermath of a startling crime from the viewpoint of everyone affected, from witnesses to perpetrators to detectives to friends and family. Much like Clockers, it uses an early murder and its subsequent investigation as a jumping-off point for an examination of the internal tensions and pressures that impact cities and their put-upon residents. In the process, it showcases all of Price's enormous gifts as a storyteller: his mastery of place; his knack for almost frighteningly believable dialogue and characterization; and above all else his unmatched ability to translate discomfort and confusion onto the page.

As usual for Price, Lush Life is less about plot than about characters and setting, with an exacting attention to detail and tough-edged urban realism that marks much of the best crime fiction. Price's insight into the minds of his protagonists allows you to feel sympathy for them even when they behave in a less-than-exemplary manner, and even the gallery of supporting characters who fill out the periphery are fully realized and have stories of their own to tell. Even the city of New York itself becomes a character, ethnically diverse, rich with history, and home to people with aspirations to be just about everything except for what they actually are. Echoing one of the best of the many great aspects of The Wire, Lush Life takes place in a world in which few people get to be better or worse than anyone else; the great mass of its characters lie somewhere in a vast and ambiguous middle ground. In a refreshingly sharp contrast to TV shows where cops have all the answers, Lush Life finds its homicide investigators plagued by flawed eyewitness testimony, office politics, time and manpower crunches, and simple inertia.

Although Price doesn't make much of an effort to conceal his killer's identity, the book's plot itself isn't particularly different from standard murder-mystery fare. Shortly after being introduced, Ike Marcus, an energetic young bartender and aspring actor in a Lower East Side filled with similar types, is fatally shot during a robbery gone wrong after a night out at the bars. Emerging from the confusion of the early investigation, the story eventually coalesces around four central characters: Matty Clark, the lead investigator on the case; Billy Marcus, the victim's father; Tristan Acevedo, the apparent triggerman; and Eric Cash, the victim's boss and a witness to the shooting, whom Matty quickly fixes upon as his prime suspect. Between them these four widely disparate protagonists struggle under a wide range of unfulfilled aspirations and personal issues, all of which are magnified as they try to go on with their lives following a life-altering event. The book actually reaches its peak early with the chaotic, maddening rush of the investigation's early stages and the gut-wrenching interrogation of Eric by Matty and his partner, a scene laden with dramatic irony as the detectives put all of their energy into breaking the will of a suspect whom we know is really innocent. When the case loses some its momentum the book does as well, with Price getting more and more into the character arcs at the occasional expense of narrative drive. There were a few times, most notably a rather awkward memorial service for the murder victim, that I couldn't help but wish Price would move things along, superbly rendered as they may have been.

Any pacing issues aside, though, Lush Life is still a compelling piece of urban crime fiction from a master of the style. As always, Price's individualistic writing style and extensive knowledge of city life makes for fascinating reading even when his characters are doing nothing more than talking. Anyone who would rather watch drying paint than another episode of the latest CSI or Law and Order incarnation is advised to check it out.

Summary of Lush Life: A Novel

So, what do you do?" Whenever people asked him, Eric Cash used to have a dozen answers. Artist, actor, screenwriter . . . But now he's thirty-five years old and he's still living on the Lower East Side, still in the restaurant business, still serving the people he wanted to be. What does Eric do? He manages. Not like Ike Marcus. Ike was young, good-looking, people liked him. Ask him what he did, he wouldn't say tending bar. He was going places--until two street kids stepped up to him and Eric one night and pulled a gun. At least, that's Eric's version.

In Lush Life, Richard Price tears the shiny veneer off the "new" New York to show us the hidden cracks, the underground networks of control and violence beneath the glamour. Lush Life is an Xray of the street in the age of no broken windows and "quality of life" squads, from a writer whose "tough, gritty brand of social realism . . . reads like a movie in prose" (Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times).

Amazon Significant Seven, March 2008: No one has a better ear and eye for the American city than Richard Price, and in Lush Life, his first novel in five years, he leaves the fictional environs of Dempsy, New Jersey, where Clockers, Freedomland, and Samaritan were set, for a few crowded blocks of Manhattan's Lower East Side. There's a crime at the heart of the story, but you don't read Price for plot. Instead, you listen as he peels apart layers of class and history through the way his characters talk to each other: hipster bartenders who tell people they're really writers, homeboys from housing projects named after the Jewish immigrants who have long left the neighborhood, and cops, cops, cops, circling the streets looking for a collar, disappearing into their cases as their own lives go to ruin. --Tom Nissley

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